The East Block (Whitney Block)
![East Block (Whitney Block)](/sites/default/files/styles/medium/public/legacy/timeline_content/48.jpg?itok=Cny4f26V)
Growth in the province leads to a growing provincial administration. The Ontario Government built the East Block (now known as the Whitney Block) to house government departments.
Growth in the province leads to a growing provincial administration. The Ontario Government built the East Block (now known as the Whitney Block) to house government departments.
The United Farmers of Ontario narrowly won a victory in the October 1919 provincial election over William Hearst’s Conservatives. The party does not have a leader, although they eventually settled on the choice of progressive farmer E.C. Drury as the province’s next Premier.
Britain declares war against Germany on August 4th, 1914, with Canada entering the war at the same time in support of its mother nation.
In 1905, James Whitney was elected as the province’s first Conservative Premier in 33 years, winning the January election with a majority.
In 1885, after an unsuccessful design competition, Richard A. Waite, a British-born architect and panelist judging the submitted designs for a new Ontario Legislative Building, unveils his own plans - the provincial government rapidly accepts them.
A new Parliament Building for Upper Canada was completed over the foundation of the first structure. It only lasted four years - an overheated chimney flue started a fire that destroyed the building in 1824, leaving the Legislature to meet in various other locations at York.
Following the Charlottetown Conference, delegates from Canada and the Maritimes met again at Quebec City in October 1864 to continue discussions on a union between the two regions and the creation of a new country.
On September 11, 1860, Queen’s Park - future location of Ontario's Legislative Assembly - is opened officially as a public city park in Toronto by Edward, Prince of Wales, eldest son of Queen Victoria and the future King Edward VII.
John Graves Simcoe was appointed the first Lieutenant Governor of Upper Canada by the British Parliament after the passage of the Constitutional Act in 1791. He travelled to Canada the following year with his wife, Elizabeth, and one of three daughters.
With the passage of the Ontario Arboreal Emblem Act in 1984, the Eastern White Pine became the official tree of the province.